Title: PART I: Introduction to Student Retention
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2PART I Introduction to Student Retention
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5This Retreat
- The Staff
- The Agenda
- The Worksheets
- The Networking/Collaboration
- The Follow-Up
6Retreat Rules
- Have Fun
- Meet and talk with your colleagues
- Ask questions
- Interact
- Think about what you can bring back with you (not
something from the hotel) - Enjoy the surroundings
7Our Objectives
- Are objectives during this retreat are to provide
participants with - A more comprehensive understanding of theoretical
and practical reasons for student departure and
success - An understanding of the barriers to student
success - A framework for developing a comprehensive plan
for improving student success at your
institution - Data on student success and persistence at the
two- and four-year levels in Canada and the U.S. - Strategies and best practices for improving
student success on campus - Information on how to track and monitor students
throughout their education - A perspective on leadership and campus change
(continuous improvement) necessary to improve
student success - An opportunity to create diverse networks of
professionals like yourself who are committed to
serving students at a high level - Motivation to go back to your college and improve
services to all students
8R101 Online Survey
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10Retention and student success are important
issues to me.
11Retention and student success are important
issues to the academic leadership.
12My president/CEO considers retention and student
success to be important issues.
13Our faculty/staff consider retention and student
success to be important issues.
14I am familiar with the literature that explain
why students leave or stay.
15I receive regular information from campus
leadership about the status of our retention/
persistence issues on campus.
16Who is in charge of student retention on your
campus?
- Dean of Academic Affairs and my area, the
Department of Academic Success - Under the direct supervision of the Board and CEO
at ACCESS College Foundation, that would be me. - I have recently been hired as the coordinator for
student retention so I guess it would fall a
great deal on me. - Academic Support Services
- There is a Retention Specialist individual in
each of our three campuses. - A newly created position of "Director of
Retention" that's me...thankfully there are
several other new team members that are also
actively involved and in on the groundswell of
making a change in our student retention. - Everyone that works at the college is responsible
for student success and retention. - There is shared ownership of the persistence
(retention) initiatives on our campus. - I am.
- Everyone
- No one is in charge however everyone at the
college should be accountable for our student
retention and success.
17Why do students leave your campus?
- - MONEY!!!!!!!!!!!
- Three quarters of our students leave voluntarily,
one quarter leave due to academic failure - Lack of preparation and awareness on how to
survive college academically and financially both
before college and during the first year. - My position is in the System office. We do not
have information on why students leave individual
UW institutions. - There are various reasons such as, financial,
personal, grades, to persue other options.
Simply put, because they are unhappy for one or
many reasons. - Financial reasons, personal/family reasons
- Personal issues Health issues money issues
- Lack of good advising on a regular bassis. Lack
of orientation to a college environment. Students
don't have a goal on what they want to acheive
for themselves. Lack of campus life on two of the
four campuses. Not enough involved faculty as we
use many adjuncts. No central admissions for four
campuses.
18Why do students leave your campus?
- Our recent research shows that half go into the
local workforce and half transfer to other
schools, of which many to college. - Students leave because don't have money to get to
school, they don't have childcare, they become
sick or a family member becomes sick, they have a
bad experience at the college, or they are not
academically and socially ready for college. - Students leave for a number of reasons. Some
leave because they are not doing well in class,
others leave because of personal issues
conflicting with school obligations... and others
leave because the school may not have met their
expectations (i.e. service offerings, course
offerings, etc)
19Why do students leave your campus?
- According to our research, there are just about
as many reasons as there are people leaving.
Because I can't go into too much detail here, we
found there were two main categories for those
students who did not have to leave because of
academic reasons half of them went into the
workforce (not necessarily because of student
debt but also because the economy is healthy and
they can make good without a degree at this
time), the other half went into other
post-secondary education (particularly those
institutions that offer diplomas in applied
programs) because they did not feel that our
institution was adequately connecting their
program of study with a career outcome. There
were sub-categories with particular reasons why
first-year students did not return and why upper
year students didn't. - Multiple reasons Academic preparedness being
number one, transfer number 2 (which may have
overlap with 1) and financial ability - Finances, time issues, family matters
- 1. No money for tuition and books. 2. Family
matters. 3. Employment matters. 4. Unable to
juggle family, home,work, job and school. - A number of reasons, I am unsure at this time.
20What do you think your campus does well in
support of students?
- Engage students (ie. campus recreation, fitness
centre, University Life 101 Program) Realign and
refocus our student services - Maintaining ongoing contact with students in an
outreach/referral/educational motivational
capacity towards services in place on campus that
encourage student success. - At the System office, we do not have information
on what campuses do well with regard to
serving/keeping students. - It is a smaller institution within a friendly
city. There are many programs and services to
meet the needs of just about any type of student.
We try to do as much as we possibly can to make
the student make connections with fellow students
as well as the city. - Academic Support (i.e., tutoring, etc.) Student
Life (extra curricular activities such as
organizations, entertainment, sports, choir,
band, etc).
21What do you think your campus does well in
support of students?
- Low cost small campus
- Good online teaching for students. The full time
faculty are very dedicated to serving their
students. Two campuses are new and modern with
their own libraries. - Decent orientation program with available career
councilling during degree. Improving teaching
skills training available to professors. - We do a lot of early intervention.
- Our campus is very communicative with the
students. Each semester, our president conducts
an open forum with our students to assess the
climate of the campus. Viable suggestions are
returned to the management team, and we must
offer feedback on progress made. This feedback
is then displayed to the students. - We have a Campus Representative program at the
four universities in Cleveland where enrollment
of CSP recipients is highest.
22What do you think your campus does well in
support of students?
- The program provides peer mentoring for CSP
recipients by matching upperclassmen with
freshmen. It also offers monthly workshops
geared towards academic success and a successful
transition to college life. We are really aiming
to boost retention initiatives this year, so I'm
looking forward to learning strategies from
others at this conference. - For the most part, our faculty and staff really
do care about the success of our students and our
students say that our faculty is our biggest
asset in terms of developing relationships with
students to help them succeed. On the other
hand, our students say that our faculty is our
worst asset because they don't develop good
relationships with students... - Good academic support center services. Either
not enough staff or not enough awareness of its
services - We care and we respond to students' concerns well.
23What do you think your campus does well in
support of students?
- 1. Students attend freshmen orientation class.
2. Students are assigned academic advisor. 3.
Students are encourged to attend self-help and
student success seminars. - we can do much better.
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28Who do we serve?
29Number of Institutions Attended
30Initial Degree Goal
31Attendance Intensity and Continuity
32Delayed Enrollment
33Degree Goal vs. Degree Attainment
34Degree Attainment and Persistence
35Question 1
- Why is Retention an Important Issue?
- Retention stable at 50 percent
- Issues of cost and quality
- Federal and state intervention
36Dropout and Defaults
37Question 2
- When does student dropout/departure occur?
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39The Ongoing Retention Challenge
- One quarter of all students who enter
postsecondary education for the first time end up
at another institution before attaining a
postsecondary degree. - Almost half (46 percent) of first-time students
who left their initial institution by the end of
the first year never came back to postsecondary
education. - Students who attend full-time or whose attendance
was continuous were much more likely to achieve
their degree goals than other students. However,
only about two-thirds of students were
continuously enrolled.
40The Ongoing Retention Challenge
- 50 percent of four-year students who did not
delay entry into PSE earned their degree at their
first institution, compared to only 27 percent of
students who were delayed entrants. - 42 percent of students whose first-year grade
point average was 2.25 or less left postsecondary
education permanently.
41Question 3
- Why do Students Leave?
- Academic Preparedness
- Campus Climate Poor Fit
- Weak Commitment to Educational Goals and/or
Institution - Failure to Socially and/or Academically Integrate
- Lack of Financial Support/Aid
42Question 4
- Why should institutions care?
- Loss of revenue to the institution
- Poor business model
- Lower prestige and morale
- Its the right thing to do its in the mission
43The Cost of Departure
- The Individual, the Institution
- and Society
44Impact on Students
- Self-Concept
- Decline in confidence, perceived incompetence
- Desire to Graduate
- Loss of motivation feelings of helplessness lead
to consideration of options - Perception of Institution
- Less positive view of college
45Student Outcome Types
46Inst. commit
Ed. commit
Confid
47Student VoicesSource of Pride this Semester
- Achieving a higher average than in high school
- Achieving above average marks for me
- Achieving an 80 in my courses
- Achieving an A on an essay
- Achieving better grades.
- Achieving dean's list status
- Achieving good marks.
- Achieving high grades
- Achieving high grades in Math it was always my
weakest subject. - Achieving high grades, and being able to tutor
fellow students. - Achieving high marks
- Achieving high marks are on first group of tests
- Achieving my goals and receiving amazing grades,
as well as realizing that I have a definite
passion for what I am studying - Achieving my marks. I am pretty proud of them.
- Achieving my semester goals academically and
personally, maintaining my sanity and really
learning to relax and enjoy my life and the lives
I influence.
48Cost to Institutions
- Lost income
- leavers x (tuition govt. funding) M
- Wasted
- Recruitment, admissions, registration,
orientation, instructional time etc. - Impact on Key Performance Indicators
- Student satisfaction, graduation rates
- Impact on Image
- Prospective students, trustees, legislators,
public
49Cost to Society
- Economic Benefits
- Human Capital
- Productivity
- Wealth generation
- Human Condition
- Health costs
- Social order
50This is what a 1 increase in student retention
looks like.
- This is what a 1 increase in student retention
looks like. While 'student retention' may sound
like administrivia, it's far from it. It's about
individual students, their potential and their
future...and ours. For each of the past five
years, the University of NebraskaLincoln has
done 1 better in student retention than the year
before. That means 36 more students 'hung in
there' to move toward graduation...180 more since
2000.
51Best Practices at UNL
- RETENTION IS OUR JOB.
- GIVE THE RED CARPET TREATMENT.
- CHECK IT OUT AT MID-SEMESTER.
- GET TO KNOW OUR STUDENTS.
- TELL THEM HOW THEY'RE DOING.
- BE PERSONAL.
- DEVELOP YOUR SKILLS.
- ENCOURAGE RE-ENROLLMENT.
52PART I Introduction to Student Retention